World News

President Emmanuel Macron’s reputation on the line with pension reform push

The French government is set to announce its proposals for overhauling the pension system on Tuesday, in a potentially explosive reform fraught with danger for President Emmanuel Macron.

With his oft-repeated belief that the French “need to work more”, Macron has doggedly insisted since his rise to power in 2017 that the pension system must be streamlined.

But having called off his first attempt in 2020 in the face of protests and the Covid-19 pandemic, the 45-year-old centrist put the issue at the heart of his successful campaign for a second term in April last year. 

As well as simplifying the system and removing privileges enjoyed by workers in some sectors of the economy, the reform will aim to raise the retirement age from its current level of 62 — most likely to 64.

“On the whole, the idea of the reform is not supported by the public, even though some can understand that if we live for longer then we might need to work for longer,” Bruno Cautres, a political expert at Sciences Po university in Paris, told AFP. 

All of France’s trade unions and most of the country’s opposition political parties are preparing for battle, seeing the struggle as a way of protecting the country’s social system and undermining Macron’s position.

The former investment banker lost his parliamentary majority in legislative elections in June in a major setback. He has made pension reform one of the main planks of his plans for domestic reform during his second term.

“If Emmanuel Macron wants to make it the mother of reforms… for us it will be the mother of battles,” warned the head of the hard-left FO union, Frederic Souillot, over the weekend.

Street protests and strikes appear inevitable, with Macron’s last attempt resulting in the longest public transport stoppage in Paris in three decades.

Of greater concern to the government is the risk of spontaneous protests of the sort seen in 2018 when people wearing fluorescent yellow safety jackets began blocking roads, sparking what became known as the “Yellow Vest” revolt.

The often violent display of defiance struck fear into the heart of government, leading Macron to promise a gentler, less authoritarian style of governing.

“I don’t see another ‘Yellow Vest’ crisis happening,” Cautres told AFP, even though he said the national mood was one of “pessimism, fatalism and anger” and a sense that “we’re permanently in crisis.”

Some in government are banking on the country acquiescing to a change that is widely disliked but viewed as inevitable, particularly given that most of France’s neighbours have hiked the retirement age to 65 or beyond.

Source: eNCA

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